LOCAL/STATE CAMPUS Panel explores imperialism in American culture Scholars from the University and around the country will discuss the impact of imperialism in American culture from 9:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. today at the Michigan League. The series of panel discussions will include such topics as "Border Policing" and the "Deployment of V Indigenous People." Keynote addresses will be given by Universi- ty of South Carolina English Prof. David Shields and University of California at Santa Cruz history Prof. Neferti Tadiar. Arb seeks volunteers to help with restoration The University's Nichols Arboretum staff is inviting the community to help them remove unwanted vegetation. Visitors can also prepare new planting sites from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday at the Arb. Participants also have the option of bringing their own loppers or pruners. Snacks and other tools will also be pro- vided. Hill Auditorium remembers the past nine decades The University Musical Society will present a series of lectures to highlight different musical events from the past 90 years of Hill Audi- torium at 3 p.m. on Sunday in the Ann Arbor District Library. Featured recordings for the events will include opera singer Ewa Podles, pianist Evgeny Kissin, the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra con- ducted by James Levine and several other performers that had been scheduled for the 2003 and 2004 Choral Union Series. Brown sisters to give lecture on integration The daughters of the late Rev. Oliver Brown, who fought for integration of public education in the landmark case Brown v. Board of Education, will speak at Rackham Graduate School Auditorium at 6 p.m. on Monday. The lecture is called "A Conversa- tion with the Brown Sisters," and the sisters will speak on their own expe- riences about the integration of pub- lic schools in relation to the U.S. Supreme Court decision in 1954. In addition, the question-and- answer setting of the program will allow for students to share their own experiences with the integration of public schools and their experiences in relation to the University's affir- mative action cases. This event is sponsored by the Office of Academic and Multicultur- al Initiatives. Advocate, author speaks about disability rights Adrienne Asch, a renowned advo- cate, author and teacher will lecture on the boundary between genetic enhancement and disability issues at the Michigan League on Monday from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Asch is a professor of biology at Wellesley College and her lecture is being sponsored by the University's Life Sciences, Values and Society Program. Annual King commemorative march to occur The 22nd annual Martin Luther King Jr. march will occur at 2 p.m. starting at the Washtenaw County Building on Sunday in downtown Ann Arbor. The march will end at the Second Baptist Church which is located on 850 Red Oak St. The program at the church will begin at 4 p.m. with the event fea- turing speaker Ronald Wood, profes- sor of American studies at Eastern Michigan University. The event is being sponsored by the Second Baptist Church of Ann Arbor. The Ann Arbor Committee for Peace will be marching with the members of the Baptist church. Acoustic quartet from Virginia will Keeping watch The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 9, 2004 - 3 Brewer: No candidate holds deci'ive lead iz state so far BREWER Continued from Page 1 the party on Feb. 7 if they choose. In presidential elections Michigan is typically a "swing" state where both Republican and Demo- cratic presidential candidates campaign heavily. Even now, the Democrats look to reach a broader constituency statewide. "In Washtenaw County, I know that we chose to have a voting site on (the Universityof Michi- gan's) campus and we also have a site on (Michigan State University's) campus. We're really trying to reach students and minority communities as part of our outreach effort," Brewer said. "Currently, six of the nine Democratic candi- dates have paid staff in Michigan and right now no one is really in front," Brewer said. "The can- didates will begin campaigning in Michigan toward the end of the month after New Hamp- shire and Iowa." The Iowa Democratic Party holds its caucuses Jan. 19 and the New Hampshire Democratic Party holds its primary Jan. 27. Some of the major issues at stake for voters in Michigan are the current economic recession, health care and what Brewer called "the creation U.S. Border Patrol agent Mindi Thomas watches a Canadian Pacific train enter the tunnel under the Detroit River on its way into Ontario from Detroit yesterday. HILL Continued from Page 1 the planning phase, restores Hill to its early-20th century "Arts and Crafts" decor. The University masked the orig- inal design during a 1949 remodeling project. "Because it's a restoration, we did it so it looks like it's always been here," said Henry Baier, associate vice presi- dent for facilities and operations for the University, who oversaw the audi- torium's latest makeover. There are now, however, some amenities - artistic, acoustical and practical - that were absent from the hall when workers originally complet- ed its construction in 1913. In regarding the interior of the audi- torium - which is also listed in the National Register of Historic Places - project coordinators brought back the house's gold, blue and bronze color scheme, illuminating more than 300 "medallion" and "necklace" lights on the hall's vaulting walls. They also hand-painted the yawning glass laylight that gazes down upon the audience. But whereas longtime patrons of the auditorium may remember seeing blue painted organ pipes on stage, workers leafed those pipes in gold. "They were very simple colors," Baier said, referring to the hall's 1949 motif. "They would be kind of a light beige, a light gray, where now you look it is very warm - very elegant." In addition, the project organizers - interior designer Mariuca Bran- coveanu and architectural firms Albert Kahn Associates and Quinn Evans/Architects - fixed to the ceiling's zenith a blue and gold 'M' pendant and replaced the once upholstered seats with velvet-cov- ered wood-backs. Aside from enhancing Hill's appear- ance, project coordinators also improved the auditorium's acoustical properties. A set of heavy, leather-bound doors and an underground ventila- tion system buried beneath the Modern Languages Building assure that unwanted noises from the main lobby - also newly renovated - and the air conditioning will not dis- turb concertgoers. "We were going to drop a pin on stage and see if you could hear it at the upper level and mezzanine level," said Diane Brown, facilities and operations spokeswoman. While Hill's acoustics were by no means poor before the renovations, Bradley Bloom, associate dean of the School of Music, said a new archway constructed over lower-mezzanine seats in the back of the auditorium will eliminate the "echo effect" per- formers experienced onstage in previ- ous years. During a media tour of the hall before patrons began streaming past its doors, Baier said preserving Hill's sonic ascendancy was a chief goal of all project coordinators. "We took care not to change the par- abolic geometry of Hill, which con- trols acoustics," he said. "We tried to preserve the acoustics ... It will feel very, very fine to come back homt to Hill." - Karen Wolff Dean, School of Music The ceremony's musical perform- ances, quite literally, echoed Baier's reflections. Between speeches from architects and faculty, University music students roused visitors with opera, rich violin jigs and trumpet fanfares that cut across the hall without the aid of microphones. "We've tried to preserve the acoustics," Music Dean Karen Wolff said. "It will feel very, very fine to come back home to Hill." For situations that call for some amplification, such as Freshman Convocation and lectures, orators can avail themselves of the hall's upgraded sound technology, which includes new speakers tucked behind the organ pipes. Renovations also make Hill a more accommodating facility. Additional' lobbies and meeting spaces, wheel- chair-accessible seating, ramps alongside staircases, updated fire and alarm systems, brighter exterior lighting and more bathrooms - twice as many as before the project began - enhance patrons' visits to the auditorium. "This was just a wasted space," Coleman said, referring to a now refurbished, whitewashed lower lobby that previously displayed only rust and piping. The space plans to soon exhibit the Stearns Collection of Musical Instru- ments, the University's collection of more than 2,000 instruments from around the world. Despite a host of new amenities, Baier said project coordinators were forced to cut back on one of the hall's features: seating. The restored Hill contains about 500 fewer seats than before its renovation, according to fact sheets provided by the Uni- versity. But at 3,600 seats, it's still 1.5 times the size of New York City's Carnegie Hall, said Kenneth Fischer, president of the University Musical Society. Although the restoration project proved costly, the proposal has been handed down through five University presidents - who held their tenure during better economic times, Cole- man said. Now that the University has taken a $16.4-million funding cut for the win- ter term, administrators must begin to focus more on issues that immediately affect students, she said. But she added that the auditorium can be an educational asset in itself. "It will allow our community to ben- efit from not only having great per- formers, but when those performers come to the University, they visit the classrooms," she said. of an urban agenda." INITIATIVEI Continued from Page 1I the United Auto Workers and the I Michigan Catholic Conference. Also in opposition to Connerly, BAMN has refocused its efforts afterc this summer's court decision and plans to match his door-to-door campaign r with a similar effort. "Wherever Connerly and his sup-I porters are, we are going to meet themr with a growing civil rights movement," LSA senior and BAMN organizer Kate Stenvig said. The activist group has already begunt its efforts. Since last fall, BAMN hasc waged a boycott against Coors, which they say funds Ward Connerly and his campaign. They have also mobilized support from middle and high school students c - most of whom live in the Detroit metropolitan area.c MCRI, however, is undeterred and not surprised by the resistance. The e American Civil Rights Coalition,i MCRI's umbrella organization, has c "Michigan has already lost 200,000 manufac- turing jobs since Bush was elected president," Brewer said. "We're in a recession in Michigan, and we also have a real problem with health care. These are very serious bread-and-butter issues that could cost the president in the fall." In the last three presidential elections, Michigan voters chose Democratic candidates. "Everything is geared toward the election in the fall toward beating George W. Bush," Brewer said. But now the caucuses are the major focus, Brewer said. "Past primaries have always depend- ed on the (voter) turnout. The largest turnout we ever had for a primary was in 1988 with 200,000 voters. With numbers like that, in this election students could make the difference." Michigan has 153 delegates that will attend the Democratic National Convention from July 26 to July 29. One hundred twenty-eight of those will be elected based on how the candidates fare on Feb. 7. The number of delegates is proportional to the number of votes the candidates receive in the caucuses. "The elected delegates pledge their support for the candidate and are bound for the first ballot at the convention. If the candidate withdraws before the convention, the delegates may then vote for whoever they please," Brewer said. n Wash- The language of the proposed p. Leon amendment borrows phrases from the id they landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964. n these But there are conspicuous differ- ences, most notably the addition of the hey've phrase "preferential treatment." Drolet, BAMN sees this phrase as an g com- inflammatory distortion of the law's original intent. nitiative "It misuses and misrepresents what 517 sig- the Civil Rights Act was created for, et a ref- which was to create opportunities for oposed blacks and Latinos," Stenvig added. The group said MCRI is "blatantly some of lying to the people of Michigan" by s either propagating legislation that is an "anti- nitiative civil rights, segregationist and racist attack," she said. ;et them But MCRI denied it is manipulating the truth. is as not "It's going to in effect put into the Michigan Constitution what ar side, everybody thinks the Equal Protec- e) is an tion Clause already says," said It's an Justin Jones, director of policy and ttack on planning for ACRC. "There are truth," those who want to be more equal than others." held successful referendums it ington and California. State Re Drolet (R-Clinton Twp.) sa faced organized opposition i states, as well. "They are expected. T cropped up everywhere," said who co-chairs MCRI's steerin mittee. Despite this opposition, the i persists. The group needs 317, natures by July 6 in order to g erendum vote on the pr amendment. But Drolet disapproves of s the opposition's tactics. Group distort or simply lie about the i and its purpose, he said. "Relying on the truth won't g anywhere," he said. BAMN views such statement only false but also hypocritical. "We have the truth on ou obviously. (MCRI's initiative attack on affirmative action. attack on civil rights. It's an at integration. And that's the Stenvig said. COUGH Continued from Page 1 intranasal version of the flu shot. "Our d'efiind fbr FluMist has been very high," Krista Hopson, media coordinator for UMHS. The University decided earlier not to offer FluMist to stu- dents because of certain risks associated with it. Despite the shortage, their stance has not changed. "We still don't have the confidence in FluMist to use it. Unless you're at high risk you shouldn't," said Winfield. Currently, not many students at the University are among those at high risk. According to an email update yesterday by Laura Bau- man, epidemiologist at Washtenaw County Public Health only 27 percent of reported influenza cases in Washtenaw County have been of people ages 18-49. Winfield saw similar results at UHS in the last three days with less infected students coming in. For such reasons, CDC has put off calling this year's outbreak an epidemic, stating it is too early in the flu sea- son to tell. ow h DA Y-SOPB40MANr )SttR CAL :7634459. TO..PICK UP..A.:.. R..JN. .m:iipt.:yrtJ.tvv>:i:Y:::i ':O.c":i'vi:} i .... ;: :.5B.CU S:?MY ,? : :r.rV ...; ..y..Ei. SCA.::>di:v'R°'?f" '. fl:. 1 JOIN q"E AILY... .... I Consider La Salle University's Full-time MBA Program. Our AACSB-accredited Full-time MBA Program features opportunities to: I i